Fire Risk Assessments

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Fire Risk Assessments

Did you know that around 38% of UK businesses do not have suitable or current fire risk assessments in place—leaving them non-compliant with the law and dangerously exposed to fire risks? A thorough fire risk assessment is your legal foundation and best defence. Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, the responsible person must carry out, record, and regularly review a suitable fire risk assessment to identify hazards, evaluate risks to people, and implement effective control measures—preventing fires, ensuring safe evacuation, and protecting lives and property.

Why Choose FST Systems for Your Fire Risk Assessment Needs?

Our expert assessments follow recognised methodologies, cover all relevant premises areas, highlight significant findings, recommend practical actions, and provide clear documentation—keeping you fully compliant, reducing enforcement risks, fines, or closure notices, and giving you confidence in your fire safety strategy. Protect your people, meet your legal duties, and safeguard your business with professional fire risk assessments from FST Systems—expertly conducted, reviewed annually (or sooner if changes occur), and tailored to your premises. Serving Chester, Wrexham, and the North West & North Wales.
Ready to safeguard your premises and your future? Contact us today for a no-obligation consultation or quote. Call 0333 444 0032, email us, or fill out our quick form— we're here to help keep your business safe and compliant.

Fire Risk Assessments: The Foundation of Your Fire Safety Compliance

A thorough fire risk assessment is the legal cornerstone of fire safety in non-domestic premises under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (Article 9). It identifies hazards, evaluates risks to people, and outlines practical measures to eliminate or reduce those risks—ensuring suitable general fire precautions, safe evacuation, and ongoing protection. Recent data shows UK fire safety compliance at a 14-year low (just 57% satisfactory audits), with inadequate or missing fire risk assessments among the top reasons for failures (over 8,000 breaches recorded annually). Many businesses still lack suitable, up-to-date assessments—leaving them exposed to fines, enforcement notices, invalidated insurance, and tragic consequences in a fire. At FST Systems, we conduct competent, detailed fire risk assessments tailored to your premises, provide clear action plans, and offer regular reviews so you stay fully compliant, protect lives, and safeguard your business with confidence.

Common Questions

Your Fire Alarm Questions, Our Expert Solutions.

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A fire risk assessment is a systematic evaluation identifying fire hazards, people at risk, evaluating risks, and determining/removing or reducing fire precautions needed to protect relevant persons (employees, visitors, contractors). Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, it is a legal requirement for virtually all non-domestic premises (offices, shops, warehouses, factories, hotels, care homes, etc.). The Responsible Person must ensure a suitable and sufficient assessment is carried out, recorded, and kept up to date to prevent fire incidents and comply with enforcement by fire authorities—non-compliance risks fines, notices, or prosecution.

 

The Responsible Person (defined in the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005) holds ultimate legal accountability—typically the employer (for workplaces), building owner, landlord, or managing agent with control over the premises. In multi-occupancy buildings, multiple Responsible Persons may need to cooperate. The assessment must be completed by a competent person (with sufficient knowledge, training, experience, and understanding of fire hazards, legislation, and premises-specific risks). This can be the Responsible Person themselves (for simple/low-risk sites), an in-house competent staff member, or a third-party qualified assessor (recommended for complex/high-risk premises). Competence is key—certification (e.g., via UKAS-accredited schemes) demonstrates suitability.

The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires the assessment to be reviewed "regularly" and kept up to date—no fixed legal interval, but it must reflect current conditions. Best practice in 2026 (widely recommended by fire services and industry):

  • Annually as a minimum for most low- to medium-risk commercial premises (e.g., offices, retail, warehouses with stable occupancy).
  • Every 6 months or more frequently for higher-risk sites (e.g., premises with sleeping accommodation, vulnerable occupants, high fire loads, or complex operations like care homes or industrial facilities). Immediate review is mandatory after significant changes (e.g., building alterations, new equipment/processes, layout changes, increased occupancy, near-miss incidents, or post-fire). Document all reviews to demonstrate compliance.

A compliant assessment (per RRFSO and guidance like PAS 79) typically covers:

  • Identifying fire hazards (ignition sources, fuels, oxygen).
  • Identifying people at risk (employees, visitors, contractors, vulnerable groups).
  • Evaluating risks and existing controls.
  • Recording significant findings (mandatory since October 2023 for all premises).
  • Recommending/removing/reducing risks and implementing general fire precautions (e.g., means of escape, warning systems, firefighting equipment, emergency lighting, fire doors).
  • Detailing fire safety arrangements (e.g., evacuation procedures, staff training, maintenance plans).
  • Considering building structure/external walls (per Fire Safety Act 2021).

It must be proportionate to the premises' size/complexity. For higher-risk or larger buildings, use a structured methodology; records must be available on-site for audits.

Commission a new or full reassessment (or professional review) if:

  • The existing assessment is outdated, incomplete, or lacks records.
  • Significant changes occur (e.g., refurbishment, new hazards, change of use, occupancy increase/decrease).
  • Following an incident, near-miss, or enforcement notice.
  • The premises are high-risk/complex (e.g., sleeping accommodation, high fire load, vulnerable occupants)—where in-house competence may be insufficient.
  • To demonstrate due diligence during insurance renewals, audits, or fire authority inspections.

Engage a competent third-party assessor (preferably certified) for objectivity and expertise in such cases. Always retain records of assessments, reviews, and actions to prove ongoing compliance under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.

These answers are practical, legally aligned, and help commercial clients meet their responsibilities. If you'd like additions like a sample 5-step FRA process diagram, links to gov.uk templates, or sector-specific notes (e.g., retail vs. industrial), let us know!